We went on an epic adventure earlier this year. 3 weeks travelling through the north and south island of New Zealand. We visited amazing places, travelled lonely roads, slept next to lakes, oceans and eat so much good food. Talked for hours in the car, a thing you barely have time when you're at home doing your thing. Met new faces and saw old friends. And found out we are pregnant and slowly realising what that means for us.

My "go-to" app on the iPhone/Andriod for photos is VSCO Cam. I am using it since it launched. And I love it. It didn't take me too long to get used to the interface and it soon moved all the way to the first homescreen of my phone.

Well crafted filters and editing modes make it heaps of fun to play around with the snapshots I take during the day. I barely use Instagram's filters anymore. I just use it for the community and social aspect. Although they introduced "The Grid" and updated it not too long ago, its not quite there yet. Have a go if you havent checked it out yet.

I love the voice-over, camera work and the grading. Lovely piece of work.

Again a really nice grade and amazing camera work.

Conrad Ostwald made another epic reel. Music and visuals just work together. Smooth transitions between shots and the great work make this to one of the best reels I have seen this year. Even his 2008 reel is still in my inspiration folder.

A few words upfront

This is my second hackintosh. I have build it in november 2012 but only found time to put this article together now. So be aware that the hardware is not top of the range anymore.

I had some good experience with the first hackintosh, that's why I am choosing this option again. The main reason I am not buying an iMac or Mac Pro is the price and not be able to expand as much as I like. I had an iMac before. Loved it but I don’t want several external Hard drives sitting on my desk or invest in an external thunderbolt enclosure to upgrade the gfx card. I am not using it as my main everyday working machine to earn money which makes it a bit easier to experiment with things and not losing valuable hours when the hardware plays up.

I had a good look around tonymacx86.com before I even began to think about my build. It is my second hackintosh and I really wanted something that is easy to install and maintain but also has some power for graphics work and 3D rendering. I tried to pick popular hardware so if there is a problem somewhere down the road there are potentially some people that can help out.

Hard drives

I had 2 HDD with 1TB and 500GB plus a 128BG SSD and I just bought a new 2TB WD Black.That leaves me with 3.5 TB on moving HDD and 2x 128 SSD.The SSD with the OS installed gets backed up manually to the second SSD. So whenever something happened I still have a working operating system.

Backing Up

I have a Time Capsule at home with an external WD Element 2TB drive. I use Time Machine to make a constant backup of my stuff. Most important my photos and some work you can never get back.I do another back up onto a second 3TB hard drive with Carbon Copy Cloner. This backup is File Vault 2 encrypted so I can take it to work and leave it in my desk. Because of that encryption no one can read that hard drive but I have a copy safe somewhere if my house gets robbed or burns down etc.

Speed

The cpu I picked is apparently quite easy to over clock. I should be able to get 4GHz out of it with the cooler I got but I haven't tested it out at all.The main speed bump is the SSD. If you're still not using an SSD you really should upgrade. Now.

Some Issues

I had some issues with the build. I couldn't figure out what it was. Sleep worked but I couldn't wake it up again. It took me quite a while to figure out that the Power Supply Unit was damaged. I connected an older unit I had lying around and all of the sudden the problems went away. I guess the problem was quite unique but my point is that if you go and buy a Hackintosh you might run into a situation where you have to figure out stuff like this on your own just because there is not one company behind the hard- and software to help you out. Either you do it all by yourself or find a trustworthy PC shop that will act as your Apple Store.

Desk

Two weeks ago I finally got a new desk. Nothing too fancy. I love it though because it wasn't too expensive and the legs have storage space for some books/toys/things. I was even lucky enough to be able to put my hackintosh into the right leg. I did not use the shelf and turned the leg around to hide the computer. There is an opening in the back so it doesn't get too hot and two openings on the front side so I can use the USB panels and headphone jack on top of the tower.

Conclusion

I am really happy with my computer. It has its flaws here and there but that's half the fun. Being able to upgrade it with more HDD is fantastic and I still have room to overclock the CPU if I want to start experimenting again. Running Windows on the 500GB hard drive as a dual boot allows me to play Battlefield 4 if I am in the mood.

Although I wouldn't recommend it to someone who just wants a computer that works. You're probably better off with an iMac or if you need more power and can spare the money a new/used Mac Pro.

I recently came across a question on MoStyle.tv Facebook page asking about breaking up the floor in Cinema 4D and let the pieces fly towards the sky.

This video was the reference:

My first thought was using thrausi to subdivide the floor and use two inheritance effectors to first move the floor up a bit as if it was breaking and then let the second inheritance effector move it towards the sky. I quickly put it together and posted it to the group.

It's not pretty but I wanted to see if its actually possible to do it that way. I didn't spend much time getting the timing or the animation right. Because Mostyle.tv is mostly in german I am gonna post my file here if anyone is interested in grabbing it.

Recently I created some simple growing vines in Cinema 4D for our "Jack The Giant Slayer" promo. I used a combination of Cylinders in a cloner with a twist deformer and a spline wrap. I added text with a rock texture and modified the spline to let the vines grow around it.

Instructions:

Animate the "to" parameter in the spline wrap effector to make the vines grow. Modify the grow spline vines to change the grow path of each vine.